Satirical art counters Trump banners on National Mall

Groups opposing the Trump administration have installed satirical statues and posters on the National Mall, challenging giant banners of President Trump on federal buildings. Installations include a gold toilet sculpture mocking White House renovations and figures depicting Trump with Jeffrey Epstein. The displays have drawn crowds, criticism, and White House rebuttals.

The National Mall in Washington has become a site of visual clashes between Trump administration displays and critics' satirical works. Giant banners featuring President Trump's face hang from buildings like the Department of Justice, Department of Labor, and Department of Agriculture. His name also appears on the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the United States Institute of Peace, according to observers on the scene. Workers installed some banners in February, drawing comparisons to authoritarian iconography from China and the Soviet Union by some visitors like University of Vermont freshman Luke Price, who said, 'I just feel like he's sort of painting himself as the king of America.' America is a democracy, not a dictatorship.' A gold-painted faux-marble toilet titled 'A Throne Fit For a King,' installed March 31 near the Lincoln Memorial by artist collective the Secret Handshake, mocks Trump's White House bathroom renovation during a government shutdown. Earlier, in February, the group erected a statue in front of the U.S. Capitol showing Trump and the late Jeffrey Epstein in a Titanic pose dubbed 'King of the World,' which attracted crowds posting photos online. The nonprofit Save America Movement has posted banners mocking officials, including one of Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller labeled 'Fascism Ain't Pretty' and Attorney General Pam Bondi as 'Epstein Queen.' Mary Corcoran, who runs the group, called ridicule 'a really important tool in an opposition toolbox to fight authoritarianism,' adding it's not a fair fight since the administration uses taxpayer dollars. White House spokesman Davis Ingle responded, 'President Trump is focused on saving our country — not garnering recognition. A variety of organizations are free to share their opinions publicly, even when they lack any basis in reality.' Jacksonville high school senior Andi Lynn Helmy criticized the Epstein statue as 'a gross interpretation of our president' and disrespectful.

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